Meanwhile, in Sichuan province, at least 160 dead and 5500 injured in earthquake

shira

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Jan 12, 2005
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So I'm visiting my wife in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, China. We have an apartment on the 18th floor of a 32-story apartment building adjacent to Sichuan University. This morning (Saturday) at about 8 AM (local time) I was browsing the internet, trying to find out about the capture of the #2 Boston Bomber, when the entire apartment began moving back and forth. This lasted for about 20 or 30 seconds. My wife and I raced down 18 flights of steps and waited outside, not sure of what would happen. It's pretty frightening being in a tall building when a strong earthquake hits, especially given the Chinese developers' tradition of evading building codes in order to maximize profits. Our building was constructed in 2010, 2 years after the magnitude 7.9 Sichuan earthquake hit, which killed at least 90,000 (some locals insist the true figure exceeds 200,000). So - in theory - it should be pretty earthquake-resistant. But there we were - my wife in her pajamas, me in bare feet - standing on a Chengdu street corner, peering at the tall buildings all around us - waiting for . . . well, what DOES one wait for after an earthquake? An "all clear" issued by planet Earth?

It turns our there was a magnitude 6.6-to-7.0 (various sources) earthquake centered in the city of Ya'an, about 70 miles away. The latest totals in Ya'an are 160 confirmed dead and more than 5500 injured, but those totals will certainly continue increase as crews continue to search through the rubble of collapsed buildings. The effects on Chengdu are mostly superficial - fallen building tiles, for example. But that's right now. Worse might be coming . . . .

The Boston Bombings were a significant blow to the American psyche, with 3 dead and over 170 injured. But by any objective measure, the devastation in Ya'an is much worse. Yes, that's comparing a terrorist act to a natural disaster. But I've been following both events, and the deaths and injuries are every bit as terrible. And the fear and uncertainty that an even bigger earthquake will hit and perhaps collapse our apartment building, with us inside of it, makes this a lot more real.
 
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Carfax83

Diamond Member
Nov 1, 2010
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Nice to see you and your wife made it out alright! :thumbsup:

And yeah, NOTHING is more terrifying than a natural disaster, whether it's a tsunami, an earthquake, a hurricane, a tornado or God forbid, a large asteroid. Can you imagine the terror a large asteroid would provoke if we knew it was hurtling towards the Earth?

Thoughts of retribution typically follow an act of terror, but with a natural disaster, all you get is your experience and the knowing that for all our power and knowledge, Mankind is still helpless against Nature.
 

tcG

Golden Member
Jul 31, 2006
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I definitely felt it on the first floor of my dorm in Wenjiang (suburb west of Chengdu). ^^ Weird that I'm posting about this on this forum.
 

Michael

Elite member
Nov 19, 1999
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Why weird? I am traveling in the UsA now but I live in Shanghai. Anandtech is not blocked in China.

Michael
 

tcG

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I should have explained further (or perhaps not because this explanation will prove boring). It feels weird to me that a college student like me - who doesn't travel much - travels to the one place in the world which makes the news on one of the internet forums that I most frequently visit back at home. And it was my first earthquake. Just a tad surreal. /lifestory
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
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I should have explained further (or perhaps not because this explanation will prove boring). It feels weird to me that a college student like me - who doesn't travel much - travels to the one place in the world which makes the news on one of the internet forums that I most frequently visit back at home. And it was my first earthquake. Just a tad surreal. /lifestory

I can imagine. I haven't been in an earthquake but I survived a tornado. It was disorientating to say the least.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
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People do not make great assessments of the risks they face. Slipping in the shower is far more dangerous than being injured in a terrorist attack but not enough people do what could be done to counter that risk and I don't mean not to bathe.

There seems to be controversy on the earthquake frequency on the Longmenshan fault that runs through the region you are in. Quakes were considered rare and not to be extremely large at one time, I think, but that seems to be in question.

At any rate aftershocks are to be expected up to two days of any size and taper down after that.

Love and stay safe.
 

shira

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2005
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I just updated the death/injury totals. As you might imagine, this is dominating the news in China. But it's the only the 4th-ranking story on the Washington Post website.
 

Michael

Elite member
Nov 19, 1999
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I chatted with a couple of my friends back home in China. Strange that a major earthquake in China is the lead story in China. And so weird that in a country far from it with other news, it isn't the lead story.

*check your sarcasm meter*

All my Chinese friends quoted the government death statistic and immediately followed with the fact that they assume it is worse as they don't trust government numbers for disasters like this.

The Shanghai area is more worried about bird flu than the earthquake.

Michael
 

Londo_Jowo

Lifer
Jan 31, 2010
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I would think they would be more worried about air pollution than bird flu. How often does a bird flu outbreak occur?

Pollution takes time to kill while the bird flu can kills in days.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/bird-flu-spreads-china-unclear/story?id=18987118#.UXMgb3yROSM

The H7N9 virus, which has killed 17 and sickened at least 82 people since March, is thought to pass from birds to humans. But its spread within families and neighborhoods has flamed fears about possible human-to-human transmission.
 

Dari

Lifer
Oct 25, 2002
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I just updated the death/injury totals. As you might imagine, this is dominating the news in China. But it's the only the 4th-ranking story on the Washington Post website.

Why is what we are more interested in that important to you? Are Chinese people that insecure?
 

tcG

Golden Member
Jul 31, 2006
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Felt smaller aftershocks all yesterday. Felt the biggest one yet half an hour ago. I'm not worried about it. In my dorm, all the female African students freak out and run out of the dorm yelling every time there is an aftershock, lol.

Apparently China is a dangerous ass place as of late. Earthquakes, bird flu, pollution...
 
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Michael

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Nov 19, 1999
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The air pollution in Shanghai is not really that bad. As long as there is a breeze from the ocean instead of a marine inversion layer, the air tends to be clear with good visibility. Nothing like Beijing - completely different micro-climate and the types of industry around Shanghai are very different than Beijing.

Michael
 

tcG

Golden Member
Jul 31, 2006
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www.aqicn.com is a good website to see the real-time air pollution statistics.

Pretty much all the major cities in China have really, really bad air pollution.
 

Murloc

Diamond Member
Jun 24, 2008
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where I live natural disasters of big scale are very rare.
The worst we get is floods and land or mud slides, but those rarely kill people (with storm floods there's always someone who was walking their dog that gets sucked in by a river or hit by a falling tree though) and slides damage very limited areas. They mainly do property damage.

I've already felt an earthquake though, it was very weak and difficult to perceive.
 

ericlp

Diamond Member
Dec 24, 2000
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try living on an active volcano! :)

4-5 earthquakes a day... They are mostly small but can get some 4-6's ... Kinda fun... I don't live in a multi story building. Just a simple shack. Quake proof!

But my wife is also from China so... we are sending our best thoughts to all of them... Stay safe indeed...

As for the bombing? Sheesh, Just remember today over 130 people died on the roads... And tomorrow... Yeah, expect the same again and again.

Your chances are way better getting in a car crash vs blown up! Be Happy!
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
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Yeah, I hear ya. The death toll from that Texas fertilizer plant explosion was higher, but I'm not even seeing stories from that on the front page of CNN.com right now. It's all Boston news right now :(